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Yahoo News : Bruce Irvin and Shea McClellin personify the struggl

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For some collegiate defenders, the move from the NCAA to the NFL is as simple as falling off a log and breaking a quarterback in half on the way down. Quinton Coples, taken 16th overall in the 2012 NFL Draft, finished his first preseason with 4.5 sacks, and the former North Carolina star recently admitted that he's still getting winded as he gets used to the speed of the pro game. Chandler Jones looks like the young pass-rusher Bill Belichick has desired for most of the last decade. Houston's Whitney Mercilus seems to be a natural in Wade Phillips' multiple fronts, and Melvin Ingram -- the man I believe to be the best overall defender in the 2012 draft class -- is already confusing opponents with his are ability to play all over the front for the San Diego Chargers. For other potential pass-rushers, however, the move to a higher rent class isn't so simple. A higher altitude for the Mountaineer With 4:39 left in the third quarter of the Seattle Seahawks' 21-3 win over the Oakland Raiders last Thursday, rookie defensive end Bruce Irvin finally sacked an NFL quarterback. It was a combined sack with cornerback Byron Maxwell, and Irvin looped inside the right tackle to get to Terrelle Pryor. Four plays later, Irvin shot through the defensive left side and caused a Pryor incompletion by hitting him just as the quarterback released the ball. And with 9:13 left in the game, Irvin contained Pryor as he was rolling right to record the first solo sack of his NFL career. Irvin's 1.5 sacks and three quarterback hits in the game won't count on the official stat sheets as this was a preseason game, but the production certainly counted to Irvin -- the 15th overall pick in the 2012 NFL draft hadn't registered a sack or tackle in the previous three games. Playing frequently in a 3-3-5 stack defense at West Virginia, Irvin relied on raw speed to get around tackles and shoot gaps when he was inexplicably asked to play inside the tackles and deal with double-teams consisting of blockers who outweighed him by 80 pounds. He never developed the moves required to succeed as a pass-rusher at the NFL level -- the inside counter and spin move most specifically -- and when the Seahawks selected him earlier than most expected Irvin to go, everyone knew there would be a transition period. "Well, he's frustrated." Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll said of Irvin the day before that Raiders game. "He's frustrated with how hard it is to get sacks, but these last two days in particular he's just looked terrific in practice. What we're trying to do is make sure we give him plenty of opportunity to take advantage of his speed. That means he has to get his quality rushes on the edge to show that. That's not to show him off, it's to utilize him. So we're trying to make sure that we get that done. "He's playing exactly like we hoped; he is going to be in all of the sub-packages. He actually had his best day of practice yesterday and the day before that was an excellent day too. What that means is he's now taking advantage of the calls, and what's asked of him, with great speed. He was thinking a lot and trying to put things together and it wasn't as natural as he would become. He's getting a lot closer. He's going to get better throughout the season; he just does not have a lot of experience behind him." Carroll also said that Irvin was close to four sacks in the Week 3 game against Kansas City, but he came away with no quarterback hits and no tackles for the third straight week, despite the fact that he was on the field for 53 percent of Seattle's defensive snaps against the Denver Broncos and 53 percent against the Chiefs. One of the reasons Irvin was finally able to cut loose against the Raiders was that no defensive player was on the field for Seattle more than the rookie -- he was active on 91 percent of the snaps, and bagged 1.5 sacks and three quarterback hits. In football, repetition facilitates understanding. For players like Irvin, few things are more important, especially given the multiple roles he and other edge defenders are often asked to play in the NCAA. Gruden: Assignments can confuse the issue "A lot of college players, if you really study the game, they never really get a chance to unleash the pass rush," ESPN's Jon Gruden told me in a media conference call this week. "There's a lot of third down and eights and nines where you're seeing a standard drop-back attack.* You are seeing spread offenses.* You are seeing options from third-and-7. "So, a lot of defensive linemen, they have multiple assignments with defending the option, their different assignments, [and] the hash marks are different.* They have field blitzes and boundary blitzes, and the amount of time where they can become specialized rushers is minimized with the 20-hour per week schedule and the kind of games they play.* You might play against a wishbone one week, and you might play against a no-huddle spread attack the next. You don't get a lot of time and individual work to really polish your pass rush. So I think those are a couple reasons why some men might struggle initially.* When you come to the NFL, if you watch the great rushers, they play right end, they play left end and they stand in multiple stances." We're not in Boise anymore... For Chicago's Shea McClellin, the challenges are different, but no less daunting.